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Subjective, behavioral, and physiological effects of acute caffeine in light, nondependent caffeine users

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Abstract

Rationale

Caffeine produces mild psychostimulant effects that are thought to underlie its widespread use. However, the direct effects of caffeine are difficult to evaluate in regular users of caffeine because of tolerance and withdrawal. Indeed, some researchers hypothesize that the psychostimulant effects of caffeine are due largely to the reversal of withdrawal and question whether there are direct effects of caffeine consumption upon mood, alertness, or mental performance in nondependent individuals.

Objective

This study investigated the physiological, subjective, and behavioral effects of 0, 50, 150, and 450 mg caffeine in 102 light, nondependent caffeine users.

Methods

Using a within-subjects design, subjects participated in four experimental sessions, in which they received each of the four drug conditions in random order under double blind conditions. Participants completed subjective effects questionnaires and vital signs were measured before and at repeated time points after drug administration. Forty minutes after the capsules were ingested, subjects completed behavioral tasks that included tests of sustained attention, short-term memory, psychomotor performance, and behavioral inhibition.

Results

Caffeine significantly increased blood pressure, and produced feelings of arousal, positive mood, and high. Caffeine increased the number of hits and decreased reaction times in a vigilance task, but impaired performance on a memory task.

Conclusion

We confirm that acute doses of caffeine, at levels typically found in a cup of coffee, produce stimulant-like subjective effects and enhance performance in light, nondependent caffeine users. These findings support the idea that the drug has psychoactive effects even in the absence of withdrawal.

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Acknowledgements

This research was supported by NIDA (DA02812) and the General Clinical Research Center (USPHS MO1RR00055). We thank Michael Miles, Pharm.D., and Peter Tang, Ph.D. of Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center for help with salivary samples and Michelle Dassinger and Liz Young for their technical assistance.

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Correspondence to Harriet de Wit.

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Childs, E., de Wit, H. Subjective, behavioral, and physiological effects of acute caffeine in light, nondependent caffeine users. Psychopharmacology 185, 514–523 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-006-0341-3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-006-0341-3

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